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The Boston Lawyers Group‘s mission is to “support the efforts of its member organizations to identify, recruit, advance and retain attorneys of color.” Its member organizations are law firms and legal organizations in and around Boston. One of the group’s key programs is aimed at developing the “...

The New York Times reports:
You know things are bad when even lawyers are getting laid off.
In downturns of years past, law firms exploited corporate failures and bitter, protracted lawsuits to keep busy and keep billing. But in this still-unfolding crisis, the embittered and the bankrupt have been relatively...

It’s the top cliché of job interviews everywhere (right up there with “I think my only real weakness is that I’m a perfectionist”), but it’s also what it takes to be successful as a lawyer. That’s always been the case, but all the more so these...

An occasional roundup of all our social media posts, reposts, shares and retweets. (Click on the little logos up there on the top left for all our various virtual hangout locations.)
Profiles of Bostonians focusing on their educational debt.
Executive power is kind of a big thing these days, what...

It’s so hard to know the job market for lawyers will be like in the next few years. The economic downturn has thrown most sectors into turmoil, and it’s anybody’s guess what will happen in LawWorld. The received wisdom is that lawyers do well in bad times...

An unprecedented amount of attention is being paid to the job prospects and salaries for new attorneys, changes in the legal profession, and changes in legal education. Much of it offers a bleak assessment of the job market for newly minted attorneys, and an even dimmer view of the cost-benefit...

So there’s this raging debate in law world now about the value of a law degree. Some law profs are arguing that it’s a million dollar degree. Others are taking issue with that claim. Who’s right, who’s wrong, and what does it mean for...

This article from Ari Kaplan, published in the National Law Journal, doesn’t just analyze why so many people go to law school without thoroughly researching their choice (especially the financial impacts). He goes further to examine some of the traits of the truly successful lawyers—and it has nothing...

Two more recent articles continue to paint a bleak financial picture for law world.
Many recent law graduates finance their bar prep courses—and the eight to ten weeks of study post-law school with private loans. A recent article on law.com tells how those loans are now becoming harder...

NALP (formerly the National Association for Law Placement—the leading research and professional resource on law careers) is convening a series of roundtables to discuss a number of aspects of the future of lawyer training and job development. Each panel is made up of law professors, law school deans, hiring...